
Zurich Open Repository and Archive University of Zurich Main Library Strickhofstrasse 39 CH-8057 Zurich www.zora.uzh.ch Year: 2016 Gleaning: old name, new practice Diković, Jovana Abstract: The practice of gleaning is linked to the centuries-old custom embedded in the customary laws of many people, according to which the master of the land holds the right to allow the poor to follow harvesters in the field and to gather and glean the fallen spears of grain. In this article, the newmeaning of the practice of gleaning is analyzed by using an example of one Serbian village in Vojvodina province, Gaj, which is still predominately agricultural. In a strict sense, the name of the old practice is kept, but the essence of the practice itself and its symbolism have changed radically. In previous times, the term “gleaning” referred to the reciprocal social, economic and political relationship between the poor and the landowner. Today, in the context of the village of Gaj, it is mostly used as a euphemism for field theft. The article analyzes this gradual shift in diachronic and social-anthropological perspectives, aiming to depict and explain crucial changes in informal and formal institutions that have contributed to this current understanding of gleaning. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07329113.2016.1165501 Posted at the Zurich Open Repository and Archive, University of Zurich ZORA URL: https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-134419 Journal Article Accepted Version Originally published at: Diković, Jovana (2016). Gleaning: old name, new practice. Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 48(2):302-321. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07329113.2016.1165501 Jovana Dikovic PhD candidate Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology University of Zurich Schaufelbergerstrasse 55, 8055, Zurich, Switzerland Mobile number: +41 79 88 70 396 E-mail: [email protected] Gleaning: Old Name, New Practice Abstract: The practice of gleaning is linked to the centuries-old custom embedded in the customary laws of many peoples, according to which the master of the land holds the right to allow the poor to follow reapers in the field and to gather and glean the fallen spears of grain. In this paper, the new meaning of the practice of gleaning is analyzed by using an example of one Serbian village in Vojvodina province, Gaj, which is still predominately agricultural. In a strict sense, the name of the old practice is kept, but the essence of the practice itself and its symbolism have changed radically. In previous times, the term ‘gleaning’ referred to the reciprocal social, economic and political relationship between the poor and the landowner. Today, in the context of the village of Gaj, it is mostly used as a euphemism for field theft. The paper analyzes this gradual shift in diachronic and social-anthropological perspectives, aiming to depict and explain crucial changes in informal and formal institutions that have contributed to this current understanding of gleaning. Keywords: gleaning, customary law, informal welfare, field theft, Roma, Vojvodina province (Serbia). Introduction Gleaning is linked to the centuries-old custom embedded in the customary laws of many peoples according to which the master of the land allows the poor to follow reapers in the field and to gather and glean the fallen spears of grain. One of the earliest agricultural laws of the Hebrews, described in the Old Testament, illustrates how the generosity of the master determined the amount of gleaned grains (The Story of Ruth 2:2-23). This early form of welfare for the needy is vastly widespread. In some places the old form of the custom is kept and involves the relationship between the landowner and the poor, while in other places different fate-based groups glean and redistribute leftover crops as part of their religious calling. Gleaning has also gained political and engaging connotations, particularly alongside the global development of capitalism and increased consumption (Edwards and Mercer 2007; Rush 2006). The focus of this paper is on the Serbian institution of gleaning (pabirčenje), which is analysed through diachronic change of institutions and empirical insights.1 Taking the village of Gaj in the south-eastern part of Vojvodina province in Serbia as an example, I discuss in detail how such an 1 ancient customary practice converted into its antipode. In other words, gleaning, as a relapse of customary welfare, instead of evoking associations related to charity, today rather represents a euphemism for field theft. Many factors have contributed to such understanding. However, two factors seem to be crucial and I will argue that the growing importance of the welfare state and the strengthening of private property have provoked such an outcome. The converted practice of gleaning acknowledges the opinions of many legal anthropologists who hold that different legal forms are not static but rather are actor-oriented and sensitive to dynamics and change (Turner 2015, 382).2 Therefore, the aim of this paper is twofold. As it analyses modifications of the practice of gleaning, which belongs to the sphere of customary law, the first aim of the paper is to contribute to the scholarship on legal pluralism, which understands the law as an analytical conception and a comparable category in cross-cultural and historical analyses, taking into consideration not only variations within state or transnational law, but also various forms of normative orders and unofficial law (F. Benda-Beckmann 2002; Benda- Beckmann and Benda-Beckmann 2006; Benda-Beckmann, Benda-Beckmann and Griffiths 2009). More concretely, this paper, with its attention to local ways of negotiating and questioning customary law, may provide a more nuanced approach to cross-cultural research and analyses of legal pluralism. On the other hand, the paper analyses in detail why actors have particular understandings of gleaning, and how they accommodate this practice to their personal needs. Sometimes their actions run counter to the normative and traditional understanding of gleaning, which creates completely new space for manoeuvring traditional norms, and for metamorphosing the institute of gleaning. In that regard, the second aim of the paper is to contribute to the scholarship on informal and informal practices in Eastern Europe, where, according to many authors, various informal practices have become routinised and normalised, particularly since the collapse of socialism as a consequence of failed economic and political reforms (Dunn 2004; Ledeneva 2006; Morris and Polese 2013; Harboe-Knudsen and Frederiksen 2015). The paper is roughly divided into two parts: theoretical and analytical. My theoretical approach, presented in the first section of the paper, starts from theoretical insights from debate about the impact of the welfare state in the process of crowding out informal welfare. In parallel with this, I observe diachronic developments of institutions of private property and the welfare state in Serbia. This is followed by the second analytical section, in which I present and discuss, apart from the local setting, actors’ understanding of gleaning and local strategies related to it. Debate on Crowding out Informal Welfare There is a great body of literature that analyses whether the modern state, known as the welfare state, has contributed to the dismantling of old traditional safety nets and customs. For the sake of simplicity, I shall refer to the latter as informal welfare, although not all such traditional customs, norms and practices have been exclusively dedicated to the support of the welfare of the community or the individual in harsh times. Some of them do not have an altruistic component at all, and their purposes might be quite diverse or purely symbolic.3 2 Informal welfare is to be understood as a spontaneously evolved and organized network of institutions (norms and customs) and practices whose aims are to share and mitigate risks (unemployment, natural catastrophes, drought etc.) and reduce the exposure to risk and existential vulnerability (such as poverty, famine, illnesses, growing old) between members of the community or family. From the earliest times, people have been developing different mechanisms for coping with and mitigating risks and hardship. Many of these mechanisms imply the sale of assets, saving, reducing consumption, migration, making alliances through marriage, sharing food, lending and borrowing in reciprocal relationships, diversification of crops and production, income diversification, volunteering, withdrawal of children from school and so on. The nature of risks is various and is caused by different factors. Existing literature distinguishes between idiosyncratic and common risks. Idiosyncratic or individual risks affect only a particular household or individual, while common risks are aggregate, economy-wide, covariate risks that affect all members of a community or region (Dercon 2002, 142). Due to the different effects of risks, idiosyncratic risks can be insured within a community, unlike common risks. In the latter case, everyone within a community is affected, and the consequences usually cannot be shared or insured among members. Alderman and Paxson (1992) offer two broad classifications of possible strategies to mitigate risk. The first is risk management that is based on anticipation of possible risk, and in accordance with that, activities are oriented towards prevention. In rural areas, this may include crop diversification, income diversification or possibly migration.
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